The Punch newspaper quoted
Mr Idris as saying at a press conference Sunday that the 24 vehicles Mr Arase
refused to return to the police included two bullet-proof BMW 7 series.
Indication of disagreement becomes evident between the immediate past Inspector General of Police, Solomon Arase, and his
successor, Ibrahim Idris, over the claim by Mr Idris that his former boss went
away with 24 police vehicles after he retired from service.
He also reportedly alleged
that the deputy Inspector Generals who retired alongside Mr. Arase also left
with between seven and eight cars each.
Mr Idris told journalists
in Abuja that a special investigation team was already probing the number of
vehicles purchased by the police in the last three years and how they were
distributed.
The acting Inspector
General also said he had written to his predecessor and other recently retired
senior police officers to return the vehicles in their possession.
“So, what I am telling you
is that I have signed a directive to my SIP (I have a special investigation panel,
I set it up). It is going to investigate all the vehicle purchases,
contributions to the police and the distribution of those vehicles in the last
three years; we are going to look into that.
“When I took over, there
was no vehicle, even the vehicle I would use. I discovered the last IG went
away with 24 vehicles; the DIGs, some of them eight, some of them seven. The
IG’s vehicles included two BMW 7 series, one armoured; and he left me with an
old car.
“The last time I followed
the President with it, he was asking me, ‘what are you doing with this old car’
because if you see the headlight, the thing has changed colour, which means
they parked it and rains and everything had fallen on it, but the new ones that
were bought, he (Arase) went with all of them; they are part of the 24.
“I wrote back to him and
said, we have a policy that says when a policeman retires, if you are an IG,
AIG, a CP, you are entitled to some vehicles; please, the extra, return it.
Four vehicles are enough for an average human being, but what will you even do
with four vehicles; but he took 24 vehicles, including two BMW cars.
“I wrote to him (Arase), I
wrote to the DIGs.”
He said he was baffled that
cars that were parked at the force headquarters transport department disappeared
just a week before he assumed duties as Inspector General.
“If you look through the
windows of my former office and from the report from my (Force) transport
officer, you would see cars but a week to the day I would resume, all these
cars disappeared.”
However, Mr. Arase denied
the allegation, describing it as a malicious propaganda.
He said Mr. Idris should
focus on confronting the security challenges in the country instead of wasting
time on “media propaganda.”
“What am I going to do with
24 cars? Do I want to open a car shop? This is a malicious accusation. There
are ways of verifying issues rather than engaging in media propaganda,” The
Punch quoted the former police boss as saying.
Meanwhile, Mr. Idris has
vowed to investigate the complaints by some officers over unfair promotions and
postings. He said he has set up a probe panel to investigate if the promotions
were in line with the dictates of the police service commission.
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